Dez on $54,896 dinner tab: 'It was all in fun'

Dez Bryant didn't mind picking up the $54,896 dinner tab for his teammates. He's OK with being teased about it.

Apologies from the guys who ran up the bill? Not needed, he insists.

"It was all in fun," Bryant said.

The rookie receiver for the Dallas Cowboys spoke to reporters Thursday for the first time since his rookie dinner became a national topic of discussion, with reactions ranging from laughter to disgust.

Most NFL teams have a tradition of a lavish meal paid for by the top draft pick. Rarely, however, does it go to this extreme.

The Cowboys went overboard as payback for Bryant violating another rookie tradition, carrying a veteran's pads at training camp.

Bryant sort of knew it was coming. Still, signing a check that big still had to be staggering, even for a guy making $2.8 million this season.

"It is funny. It was always funny," Bryant said. "It's what rookies are supposed to do. Some of the older guys apologized. I felt there was no need for them to apologize because it just happened."

Asked whether he felt taken advantage of, Bryant said, "No. Not at all."

"It's like trying to fit in, basically," he said. "I felt like those are the things you have to do in order to be a part of the team. The older guys helped me understand that everybody goes through it. It happened. It's no big deal. Everything's fine. Everybody is having fun. That's the great thing about it."

Here's further proof of what a good sport Bryant is about all this: He'll be the guest Monday night on linebacker Bradie James' radio show, which happens to be held at the steakhouse that hosted the now-infamous feast.

Team owner Jerry Jones chalked up this incident as an expensive lesson for the rookie.

"Frankly, I think he's handling it very well," Jones said on his radio show this week. "I can tell you right now that that would make my eyes water to have a bill like that, and it should. But by the same token, it's in the spirit of the same thing that Bill Parcells used to have the No. 1 draft pick bring him his water out there. It's that same type of thing that goes on with a team and the kind of rapport that you want to build on the field."

Bryant is getting used to being at the center of sensational stories.

Earlier this year, the Miami Dolphins' general manager publicly apologized to Bryant for asking in a pre-draft interview whether his mother was a prostitute. Last fall, he was suspended from Oklahoma State for lying to the NCAA about something within the rules.

Bryant is working his way up Tony Romo's list of favorite receivers. He has 14 catches for 158 yards, with a 62-yard punt return for a touchdown.

"I feel like we have chemistry," Bryant said. "He's been a tremendous leader for us, and he's making sure that everybody is on the right page. ... I feel like I'm doing good. I came along as far as learning everything. There's still a lot, but everything's fine."

Romo sees progress.

"I think Dez being a young guy, every week he's going to continue to get better," Romo said. "He's still going to make young-player mistakes. You just keep accelerating the learning curve a little bit."

Bryant also has dealt with a variety of injuries — a high ankle sprain that cost him the entire preseason, rib damage during the opener, then hip pain caused when he ran into a cameraman on the sideline during the last game, at Houston a week ago Sunday.

He knew he was hurt when he hit the guy, "but at the same time, I didn't want to show my weakness."

"I had to keep myself together and get back out there on the field," said Bryant, who finished the game before telling the team's athletic trainers he was hurting.

So far, though, the biggest welcome-to-the-NFL hit he's taken came at the steakhouse.

"I'm guessing that one of these linebackers or these safeties are waiting to get this big hit on me to let me know," he said. "I'll be ready for it."